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Monday, February 3, 2014

Monday Musings - Top Five Television Shows, Number Four - Angel!

And we are at number four on Christine's Top Five Favourite Television Shows of All Time. As a reminder, I am only listing shows that have finished their
television run, since that seems to be the only fair way to judge a television show. Last time we discussed Rowen Atkinson's Blackadder, which bring us this week to...

I had a lot of fun looking at brooding David Boreanaz photos before picking this one.

Angel!

It can be hard to judge this show individually from Buffy, since many of the elements I love
about this show—the continuity, the character development, how serialized it
becomes—are entwined with Buffy. But
the show does grow into a story about fighting to bring hope into darkness,
while I feel that Buffy was more the
other way around. That makes Angel by
default a more mature show, which gives it a host of other wonderful qualities.

It is difficult, as an adult who is working and struggling
with the pressures and responsibilities that come with adulthood, to make a
family that is consistent with the person you’ve become. But Angel realistically brings together a
group of adults and creates that bond. The family is not always perfect: boys bicker
over a girl, somebody leaves and then has to atone. But when things turn
serious, there is always somebody to help. Perhaps I’m putting it in a saccharine
light, but it is wonderful to watch characters grow into that family over
several seasons.

It is also wonderful to watch the characters grow themselves.
Take Wesley, for instance. Who thought when they first saw Wesley that he would
turn into the confident, darker Wesley of season five? I doubt anyone saw it
coming. But his growth seems completely believable with his arc over the five
seasons. That is what I love to see: characters realistically, over time,
changing into new versions of themselves. Isn’t that what happens in life? We all
change, and television characters should have a similar rate of growth. Angel nails that.

But Angel also
never forgets where it came from and what happened years ago, and constantly refers
to the past. I love that characters from seasons past can come back in
authentic ways. I love that the end of Reprise
echoes the end of Surprise from Buffy.
I love that throwaway lines in season one become arcs later on, and that the
arcs in season one become throwaway lines later on. Television should be
enjoyable and relaxing, but you should also be paying attention. Those little Easter
eggs for the people who have been paying attention are sheer joy.

So do yourself a favor, and watch Angel. If you’re like me, you will zoooom through it and daydream
about moving to Los Angeles to start a detective agency. (Then I realized that
moving to Los Angeles involves, well, Los Angeles, and I became less enamored
with the idea. But anyway.)